Follow all the latest news and updates from the Jeanne Marchig International Centre for Animal Welfare Education (JMICAWE) in Edinburgh.
The Jeanne Marchig International Centre for Animal Welfare Education aim is to strive towards improving the quality of life for all animals through education, training and by influencing policy at the highest level.

Tuesday, 5 January 2016

We are very pleased to report that the animal protection legislation
has been updated in Quebec, Canada. Even more so as one of our Online MSc
International Animal Welfare Ethics and Law students was directly involved.
Anik Boileau took the brave step to offer her services and she worked on updating
the legislation to include sentience as a key term to describe animals. We are
very proud of the work she has done.

Anik says:

“When I was in my
second year of the MSc in IAWEL, a Manifesto was created here in Quebec by a
group of 34 intellectuals, artists, journalists and professors. Entitled “Manifesto
for the evolution of Animal's legal status in the Civil Code of Quebec”, it
underlined how our Civil Code dated back to 1804 and considered animals as
"things". This Manifesto was signed by 52,000 people and that's when our Minister
of Agriculture Pierre Paradis announced he would create a Bill to improve the
legal situation of animals. I was really thrilled so I decided to write
directly to Minister Paradis's Office to offer my services as a consultant
and two months later they called me and asked me to work with their lawyer.

I advised on
different aspects, but mostly on definitions and in the writing of different
chapters. This was a process of give and take but I'm really glad that a major
step was taken in the description of animals as sentient beings in this new
animal welfare and safety Act. The changes are very important because we now
have a specific Act, recognising that" An animal's welfare or safety is
presumed to be compromised if the animal does not receive care that is consistent
with its biological needs" compared to the previous legislation that
applied to animals, in which it was only in the Civil Code under
"Property" just like any other "things" or
"belongings". My studies in IAWEL were just so helpful because I knew
which aspects were the most important ones and I was able to explain clearly
their implications from a scientific and legal point of view. My biggest
challenge was to explain how the concept of welfare comes from a holistic
approach that includes psychological states like anxiety! Thanks to the IAWEL
programme, I truly feel that animals here in Quebec now have a much brighter
welfare future ahead of them!”

We are so happy that her ongoing studies on IAWEL have helped her
feel she has the support and evidence to be able to make a difference.